4.7 Article

Establishing In-House Cutoffs of CSF Alzheimer's Disease Biomarkers for the AT(N) Stratification of the Alzheimer Center Barcelona Cohort

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23136891

Keywords

cerebrospinal fluid; Alzheimer's disease; chemiluminescent enzyme immunoassay; Lumipulse; MCI

Funding

  1. Instituto de Salud Carlos III [FI20/00215]
  2. Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities under the grant Juan de la Cierva [FJC2018-036012-I]
  3. European Union [115975, 115985]
  4. Accion Estrategica en Salud, integrated in the Spanish National RCDCI Plan [PI13/02434, PI16/01861, PI17/01474, PI19/01240, PI19/01301]
  5. Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII)-Subdireccion General de Evaluacion
  6. Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (FEDER-Una manera de Hacer Europa) [PI19/0335]
  7. CIBERNED (Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII)
  8. EU [AC17/00100, AC19/00097]
  9. Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (FEDER-Una manera de Hacer Europa)

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This study established internal cutoffs for CSF biomarkers to differentiate between Alzheimer's disease patients and amyloid-negative subjective cognitive decline individuals. The results obtained by two different methods showed good agreement but are not interchangeable. CLEIA is a good and faster alternative for providing AT(N) classification. AT(N) classifiers increase the certainty of mild cognitive impairment prognosis.
Background: Clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease (AD) increasingly incorporates CSF biomarkers. However, due to the intrinsic variability of the immunodetection techniques used to measure these biomarkers, establishing in-house cutoffs defining the positivity/negativity of CSF biomarkers is recommended. However, the cutoffs currently published are usually reported by using cross-sectional datasets, not providing evidence about its intrinsic prognostic value when applied to real-world memory clinic cases. Methods: We quantified CSF A beta 1-42, A beta 1-40, t-Tau, and p181Tau with standard INNOTEST (R) ELISA and Lumipulse G (R) chemiluminescence enzyme immunoassay (CLEIA) performed on the automated Lumipulse G600II. Determination of cutoffs included patients clinically diagnosed with probable Alzheimer's disease (AD, n = 37) and subjective cognitive decline subjects (SCD, n = 45), cognitively stable for 3 years and with no evidence of brain amyloidosis in 18F-Florbetaben-labeled positron emission tomography (FBB-PET). To compare both methods, a subset of samples for A beta 1-42 (n = 519), t-Tau (n = 399), p181Tau (n = 77), and A beta 1-40 (n = 44) was analyzed. Kappa agreement of single biomarkers and A beta 1-42/A beta 1-40 was evaluated in an independent group of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and dementia patients (n = 68). Next, established cutoffs were applied to a large real-world cohort of MCI subjects with follow-up data available (n = 647). Results: Cutoff values of A beta 1-42 and t-Tau were higher for CLEIA than for ELISA and similar for p181Tau. Spearman coefficients ranged between 0.81 for A beta 1-40 and 0.96 for p181TAU. Passing-Bablok analysis showed a systematic and proportional difference for all biomarkers but only systematic for A beta 1-40. Bland-Altman analysis showed an average difference between methods in favor of CLEIA. Kappa agreement for single biomarkers was good but lower for the A beta 1-42/A beta 1-40 ratio. Using the calculated cutoffs, we were able to stratify MCI subjects into four AT(N) categories. Kaplan-Meier analyses of AT(N) categories demonstrated gradual and differential dementia conversion rates (p = 9.815(-27)). Multivariate Cox proportional hazard models corroborated these findings, demonstrating that the proposed AT(N) classifier has prognostic value. AT(N) categories are only modestly influenced by other known factors associated with disease progression. Conclusions: We established CLEIA and ELISA internal cutoffs to discriminate AD patients from amyloid-negative SCD individuals. The results obtained by both methods are not interchangeable but show good agreement. CLEIA is a good and faster alternative to manual ELISA for providing AT(N) classification of our patients. AT(N) categories have an impact on disease progression. AT(N) classifiers increase the certainty of the MCI prognosis, which can be instrumental in managing real-world MCI subjects.

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